Indeed, admirable.. and effective.

prasad
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Chekkutty N.P <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Jun 29, 2008 10:01 AM
Subject: FOURTH ESTATE CRITIQUE from the hoot
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]



I case anyone is intereted in this experiment, from the hoot.org...npc


 Social engineering in the media?


 Thejas was a newspaper being launched by a Muslim organization dubbed
extremist by the mainstream press and there had to be a keen and clear
understanding of what was going to be its political and ideological
standpoint.  N P CHEKKUTTY chronicles his efforts to shape an editorial team
drawn from among the backward castes, dalits, and Muslim women.

Posted  Saturday, Jun 28 17:14:09, 2008

  Media scholar James Mutti's article on the Challenges before Indian media,
at the SAJA Forum, has once again brought into sharp focus the issue of
media and its social role in a developing society like India. One thing that
has been missing in most of these debates,   often initiated and carried out
by the urban centric media pundits both in India and the west, is the
changing reality of the Indian countryside and the small towns, which are
now emerging as major media centres with the fast growth of literacy,
economic development and social and political empowerment. For the first
time in Indian history,   rural masses are coming into the media picture,
not only as clichéd figures in some human interest stories but as actual
players with substantial stake as readers, advertisers and as a class of
consumers targeted by the advertisers.



James Mutti's article and Ramachandra Guha's column based on it in *
Telegraph,* has set off a wide debate on Indian media, as the large number
of responses in the SAJA Forum blog makes it amply clear. But surprisingly,
most of the debates were focused on the metro-centric Indian press, and the
rising Indian regional press got very little attention. One reason, I
believe, is that most of the media commentators are familiar with only the
urban scene and tend to ignore what goes on in the Indian countryside and
small towns, where a media revolution is now taking place. As media critic
Sevanti Ninan pointed out, "throughout the rural areas there is an emerging
rural middle class which is able to afford newspapers but which is still far
removed from popular notions of middle class consumption."





What  goes on in the non-metro regions is quite exciting, to anyone who
watches the Indian rural scene and keeps a tab on the media growth in those
places. Here I would like to write about a particular media experiment I was
involved in, during the past three years and how it has developed, despite
heavy odds empowering a cross section of the most disadvantaged sections of
our society.



Three years ago, while working in Delhi, I was invited back to my home town,
Kozhikode in Kerala, where I was asked to help develop a new newspaper that
would cater to the Muslims, the backward  castes and the Dalits who were the
most disadvantaged sections of Malayali population. These three sections
combined with certain sections in the Latin Catholic community and the
tribal people constitute the most disadvantaged sections in Kerala society.



But addressing all of them was not easy or practical. For one thing, a
newspaper that is launched from the northern part of Kerala, which in itself
is the backward part of the State, could not easily reach out to the
predominantly fisher people of the Latin Catholics in the south while the
tribal people in the hills are practically out of bounds for any newspaper,
mainly because most of them are still far from a position to buy or read a
daily newspaper.



So we had to accept this limitation and focus on the Muslims, the backward
Hindus and  Dalits, to start with. As for the Muslims, a dominant community
in Kerala though most of them are economically and socially backward, there
were already four newspapers coming from Kozhikode itself, catering to this
reading segment. The most important among them, *Madhyamam*, launched by a
Jamaat e Islami-controlled trust two decades ago, had already reached a good
circulation base with editions from various cities in Kerala and also from
the Gulf, competing for the third position in circulation after *Malayala
Manorama* and *Mathrubhumi. *



It was indeed a saturated market in Kerala, with newspapers like *
Mathrubhumi* and *Malayala Manorama* with strong financial base and access
to each and every segment of the  Malayali reading public dominating it, and
dozens of other smaller players like *Kerala Kaumudi, Mangalam, Madhyamam,
Deshabhimani, Chandrika, Siraj, Varthamanam*, etc, catering to specific
caste, community and political segments.



So right from the beginning, when we started our planning in June 2005, we
had to devise new methods to attract readership and find a niche to survive.
We also had to contend with a negative campaign as the prime movers behind
the new media initiative  was National Development Front (NDF), a Muslim
organization which was widely described as an extremist group, by their
detractors. Hence we had to prove our credentials as equal and responsible
players in a democratic polity, speaking up for those sections which were
not truly and genuinely represented in the dominant media.



During my 15 years in *Indian Express*, as a senior journalist in Kerala and
outside, I had noticed how few journalists from these backward sections were
there in the mainstream media, even in a most literate and progressive state
like Kerala. Most of the journalists came from the upper caste segments, and
as a result though the subaltern issues were generally given sufficient
space in the media, what was conspicuous by its absence was any serious and
concerted follow-up taking these issues to a logical conclusion. (In some
cases, such reports on abuse of lower castes were relegated to local
editions, thus effectively burying those stories.)



That was an area we thought we could make an impact. Right from the
beginning, we made a serious search for journalists who could join us from
the backward castes and Dalit communities, and we were successful in
developing a few new journalists even from the Dalits while even today there
are no Dalit journalists in most major Malayalam newspapers. Today we have a
few Dalit journalists with us, including a girl in the desk, who are able to
make a mark just like any others in the profession.



A second area that was left to us to explore was women journalists. Kerala's
Muslim community is generally very conservative and women are not encouraged
to take part in public life and they are not encouraged to take up jobs too.
As a result, though there were a large number of Muslim journalists and
editors in Kerala, there were not many women among them. (The only Muslim
woman journalist in Kerala at that time, to my knowledge, was Shabna Ziyad
who worked with veteran journalist Leela Menon in an evening daily in Kochi
.)



Thus at the time of recruiting, as executive editor, my main focus was to
tap the resources left unexplored by the mainstream. And I was not wrong
because there were lots of Muslim girls who were eager to join this new
profession that was closed to them till then. Not many of them were fit to
be in the desk or in bureaus, but we were able to find a few like Shabna
Ziyad (now a district level reporter at Idukky), Jasmine (presently with
Indiavision TV, Malappuram) and  Khadeeja, an abandoned wife and mother of
grown up children who was making a determined effort to find a new life.
(Later on, she emerged as one of the most effective food columnists with her
keen eye for the exotic Muslim cuisine, not explored by the well known food
writers.)



I still remember with a sense of pride and happiness those days in mid 2005
when I was engaged in a search for new faces to run a newspaper that spoke
to the subaltern sections in our society. We were able to fish out many good
talents, and one of the girls who later developed herself into a good
sub-editor and page-maker well versed on the latest version of Quark Xpress,
was the daughter of an unemployed person who had smuggled himself to a Gulf
country hiding in the lower desk of an uru, a small sea-faring vessel, as an
illegal migrant. At the time she came for the interview, she was employed as
a salesgirl in a textile shop in the city. Another boy came from Manjeri in
Malappuram whose father was an assistant to a butcher in the local meat
market. Today this Muslim boy is one of the best reporters with the paper.



It was not an easy task. We had very limited resources, and hence were not
able to rope in  the best and the well known in the media market. We decided
to take the opposite path, recruiting from the lowest sections, training
with the most advanced technological and professional systems and helping
them develop skills necessary to run a newspaper on their own. We set up an
intensive training programme that consisted of two months duration,  in
which we trained them in technical skills like Malayalam typesetting,
page-making, etc; professional skills like reporting, editing and proof
reading and translating agency copy  that came in English. Besides this we
gave them a world view, discussing how as a newspaper we would be able to
serve the society we lived in. Veteran human rights activist and journalist
Mukundan C Menon who was with us those days played a key role in this, and I
remember with a heavy heart that he died during this period, collapsing in
the class room one morning.



These class room debates and discussions had to tackle another serious
problem, of an ideological and political nature. Thejas was a newspaper
being launched by a group of people and organizations dubbed extremist by
the mainstream press and there had to be a  keen and clear understanding of
what was going to be its political and ideological standpoint. Most of the
new recruits represented a cross section of Kerala society, and it was a
serious task to find a common cohesive ideological standpoint.



We thought we would evolve as and when we went on with our work, so that we
could discuss such matters as they emerged. So a practice was evolved in
which everyday the desk and editors would together debate the stories we
did, the mistake we committed and how we would have done it better or
differently. It was mainly a desk consisting of inexperienced people, except
for only a very few, and so right from the beginning we knew we would make
mistakes and hence one of the first decisions was to keep a column for
corrections, which we did and meticulously followed through ever since.



But we were a newspaper that proclaimed to be a part of the victims at the
social, political and economic spheres. So we had to be wary of the pitfalls
of copying the international and national news agencies who generally toed
the official line, which often proved to be quite misleading or plainly
anti-Muslim or anti-Dalit or anti-backward as the case may be. So one
crucial decision was to avoid use of the word "terrorist", which was not
value neutral. We decided that whenever people are fighting for a cause and
engaged in militant struggles against armed forces of the state, we would
describe them  as fighters.



Here there was another serious question: How to describe those people who
targeted civilians? In such circumstances, the best and apt word to describe
those perpetrators of such violent acts against innocents was to use the
words extremist or militant.



It was on January 26, 2006 that *Thejas,* a new daily from Kozhikode, was
first launched after six-month long preparations. It was a success, going by
the response of the readers and the market. We were expecting a very limited
circulation, but when the first issue was printed we had printed three times
than what we had initially expected. Then came a period of fast growth with
editions in Thiruvananthapuram and Kochi in the next few months and
recently, in May 2008, the fourth edition was launched from Kannur in the
northern part of Kerala.



When I look back, I think what made us click was the fact that we made a
conscious effort to chart out a new course, in both media business and
journalistic practice. We were able to discern our weaknesses and our
shortfalls and then we made an effort to convert them into our strength, our
core competency. We saw that as a newspaper that spoke mainly to the Muslim
community in a world where 'Islamophobia' was dominant, it was necessary to
give as much global news as possible from the view point of the victims of
the aggression. We dedicated a full page to international news, with a daily
cartoon strip called Cartoon World. It was the first time a Malayalam
newspaper giving a full page in a 12-page broadsheet to international news.
Then we changed the whole outlook on Edit Page, giving shorter and sharper
editorials instead of the long and dry edits that filled two columns, that
was the order of the day in mainstream Malayalam press. Our first edit
focused on political, social and economic concerns of the day while the
second, a small write-up of 120 words, was written in a witty way on
developments in science, technology, religion, literature, etc. We also
found space for an editorial cartoon on the same page, that lampooned rather
than tickled. At a time when readers' responses were getting a short shrift
in most dailies, we ensured that one third of the space is given to readers'
letters and on Sundays the two column space for editorials was dedicated to
readers, for the new column, Readers Editorial.



Now it is time to assess how far such an unconventional media approach has
had any impact on the society and the media practice.  It is for the media
analysts and social critics to make this assessment. But there are some very
clear trends now visible: Even most of the mainstream newspapers are now
wary of using the term "terrorist" indiscriminately as they used to in the
past. As Mukundan C. Menon used to tell us, when Abdunnasar Madani, a Muslim
leader of fiery speeches, was arrested nine years ago, all newspapers
described him as a terrorist because that is what the police said. After
nine years when he came out of the jail as the court threw out all the cases
against him, he came as a reminder of how media could be misled by vested
interests. Perhaps this rethinking about how to look at media and its vital
role is a key contribution that we were able to make to Kerala society in
the past three years.



*(N P Chekkutty, executive editor of Thejas Daily, earlier worked as chief
reporter, Indian Express, Kozhikode, director, news & current affairs,
Kairali TV, Kochi, and bureau chief, Madhyamam, New Delhi.)*




   1 <http://www.thehoot.org/web/home/printstory.php?sid=3192&pg=1>
  Print  Window Close<http://www.thehoot.org/web/home/printstory.php?sid=3192#>

--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
 To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
 To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth?hl=en-GB
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to